How to Apply to Graduate School… and be Competitive
Jessica Harrell, Ph.D.
Director of Academic and Career Excellence Director, SOLAR program
Office Biomedical Graduate Education University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Today’s Discussion • My Credentials
• To Be Competitive, you have to understand the Graduate Program & Admissions Process
• What are Admissions Committees looking for
in the Application Materials…
• How can your summer research experience help…
About Me… • B.S. – LSU, Biochemistry • Ph.D. – UNC-Chapel Hill, Cell & Developmental
Biology • Teaching– UNC-CH: Genetics, Dev Bio • Now
» Direct the Academic & Career Excellence Program at UNC
• Providing academic support for graduate students in courses, for qualifying exam prep, and to enhance critical analysis skills
• Monitor and enhance success of IMSD students » Direct the Lab Skills BootCamp for incoming
PREP scholars » Direct the Summer of Learning and Research
(SOLAR) program
Today’s Discussion • My Credentials
• To Be Competitive, you have to understand the Graduate Program & Admissions Process
• What are Admissions Committees looking for
in the Application Materials…
• Now, how can your summer research experience help…
• 1 Umbrella program is the entry mechanism 14 PhD programs
• 300+ active research faculty affiliated with these 14 programs
• Many additional training programs
www.med.unc.edu/bbsp
BBSP Students Join a Program • Biochemistry & Biophysics • Bioinformatics & Computational Biology • Biology • Cell & Developmental Biology • Cellular & Molecular Physiology • Chemistry • Genetics & Molecular Biology • Microbiology & Immunology • Molecular & Cellular Pathology • Neurobiology • Oral Biology • Pharmaceutical Sciences • Pharmacology • Toxicology
BBSP Faculty Research Areas BBSP students have a wide range of research opportunities available to them.
The 14 participating PhD programs together comprise over 400 faculty with a variety of research interests, many of which span multiple areas.
Bacteriology Drug Delivery Organismal Biology Behavior Drug Discovery Pathogenesis & Infection Biochemistry Ecology Pathology Bioinformatics Evolutionary Biology Pharmacology Biomaterials Genetics Physiology Biophysics Genomics Plant Biology Cancer Biology Immunology Stem Cells Cardiovascular Biology Mineralized Tissue Structural Biology Cell Biology Molecular Biology Systems Biology Cell Signaling Molecular Medicine Toxicology Chemical Biology Nanomedicine Translational Medicine Computational Biology Neurobiology Virology Developmental Biology
1st year groups 3 rotations coursework Year 1
First year class
End of Year 1 and beyond
Matriculate into individual programs: complete degree course requirements
take qualifying exams dissertation research
BBSP First Year
Financial Support • Stipend for 2013-2014 is $27,500/yr
• Students GUARANTEED stipend support
for 5 years if they remain in good academic standing
• Health insurance, tuition, fees paid by the program (for the enrollee only)
• Apply -- Applications are submitted and binned to 1 of 4 different Admissions Committees based on the applicant’s research interests and experience.
• Review -- Faculty review the applications and select interviewees.
• Interview -- Interviewees visit UNC and meet with faculty, students, and staff during 1 of 5 interview weekends held Jan-Mar.
• Admission -- Committees meet following each weekend to decide Admissions Offers.
• Acceptance -- Initial offers are made, and additional offers may follow based on applicant decisions.
Admissions Overview
Apply Early to Increase your Chances for Admission
• BBSP 2013 Deadline – Dec. 3rd
• 4 Admissions Committees
• Application review begins well BEFORE the deadline
• Committees start meeting in December
• Greatest success – early reviewed applications (because the cmte hasn’t seen the entire pool)
• Applications will not be reviewed without GRE scores, transcript, and at least 2 of the 3 required letters
Who’s on the Committee • UNC Faculty who have active research
programs and labs… » Faculty in need of graduate students!
(Employers seeking employees!) • Review Process:
» Each Application is assigned to 2-3 faculty for review.
» They review all materials and score the application.
» Applications are ranked based on average score.
» Applications above the cut-off score are discussed during the cmte mtg to decide interview offers.
» Any application (including those below the cut-off) can be brought up for discussion.
What’s the Goal of the Application?
» Avoid being thrown into the “No Interview” group
» Convince faculty reviewers that you know what grad school is about
» Demonstrate that you have experience in a similar research/academic environment
» Persuade faculty to want to meet you and/or want to “hire” you
GET AN INTERVIEW!
Last year: >1250 applications for ~292 interviews
Today’s Discussion • My Credentials
• To Be Competitive, you have to understand
the Graduate Program & Admissions Process
• Now, how can your summer research experience help…
• What are Admissions Committees looking for in the Application Materials…
Graduate School is a Job The research advisor’s lab is
a business, and you are a ~$200K investment!
• He/She will hire the best students
• The results need to support his/her research goals
• He/She needs employees that are team players
• He/She needs employees that are self motivated
• He/She needs you to help them succeed in their own career
A Mentor’s View: The Package (remember these for LOR’s)
• Hard Working • Independent • Critical Thinker • Team Player • Passionate about Science • Creative
• Mentors Hate to see – disinterest, cell phones, Facebook, email, web surfing!!!
• They also dislike inefficiency!!!
1 Choose your lab wisely 2 Take ownership of your
project 3 Don’t work in a vacuum!!! 4 Read papers and ask
questions 5 Follow your curiosity and
passions 6 Don’t let discouragement
drag you down 7 Work hard
7 Habits of Highly Effective Graduate Students
A Competitive Application…
• Project-based research experience • Strong Letters of Recommendation • Statement of Purpose • GPA • GRE scores
What is Project-Based Research?
• No lab technician • Real hypothesis-driven project
» Scientific Question » Hypothesis » General methodology » Findings » What does your work mean to you, the lab, the
field? » Take ownership and drive the project!
• Presentations/publications
How do you get this kind of experience? • Summer Research programs • Postbacc Programs • Project-based research at your home institution
» Letter writers can defend your application in a manner you are not qualified to… so, show them your entire application. If you can’t do this, then why are you applying?
» Letters writers should want you in their lab/program
» Letter readers should want you to rotate in their lab
• How will you accomplish this? • What should the letters say?
Letters of Recommendation (LORs)
LORs can make or break an application
» Who will be your letter writers? Why? » How/When will you ask them?
LORs should…
• Not be less than 1 page… that’s too short • Not be more than 2 pages… that’s too long • Focus on the applicant… not the project • Briefly establish the letter writer’s credentials • Indicate how the applicant compares to other
grad students or undergrads that the author has trained and have been successful in grad school
• Answer the question, “Would you accept this student into your lab?”
• Expound upon the applicant’s likelihood for success in grad school and beyond?
Statement of Purpose… not a Personal Statement
• Read the Directions! Include the following… » Genuine, long-standing interest in science » Why research? What is your experience in
RESEARCH? “Why should we hire you?” » Realistic expectations of graduate education » Why you are interested in a PhD? What are your career
plans, and why is the PhD necessary for you to get there?
» Why UNC? (or the school of choice) » Remember, you are a small business hire!
• Be sure to address any “red flags” in your application – low
GRE scores, low cumulative or science GPA, limited research experience, etc. Are you a risk? If you can’t identify the red flags, ask someone else.
• Remember, what is the reader (faculty reviewer) looking for?
Quantitative score is more important in the sciences that the Verbal score… but try to do well on all components of the exam!
The average percentiles of matriculating students
for Fall 2013 are ~75% for both verbal and quantitative.
◦ How will you prepare for the GRE?
◦ What do a good GPA and low GRE scores suggest?
◦ What about the opposite?
◦ You must prepare for the exam if you want to go to grad school! You’re not a poor test-taker if you don’t prepare for months… you’re just lazy!
GRE Scores
Cumulative and Science GPA are important. C’s or lower in science courses are a problem…
You may not be able to do anything about your
grades, but don’t hide them – no “elephants in the room”!
Explain any issues… Enroll in grad-level courses to mitigate any
problems and demonstrate that they are behind you
GPA
Remember a “Package” as we review some letters...
A Mentor’s View: The Package • Hard Working • Independent • Critical Thinker • Team Player • Passionate about Science • Creative
Who was offered an interview?
• S1 - 3.6; 46%, 61%, 45%
• S2 - 3.8; 18%, 65%, 11%
• S3 - 3.3; 36%, 22%, 72%
Who was offered an interview?
• S1 - 3.6; 46%, 61%, 45% -- NO
• S2 - 3.8; 18%, 65%, 11% -- YES
• S3 - 3.3; 36%, 22%, 72% -- YES
• WHY???
Think about this… • If you were applying to grad school right
now… » Who would be your strongest letter writer?
Are you sure? Why? » What could/would they do or say in the letter
to help you gain admission?
» If you don’t know the answers to the
questions above, then why are you requesting a letter from that person?
• REMEMBER, Your application is Your best representation of You and Your qualifications… what does it say about You when You choose recommenders poorly?
Today’s Discussion • My Credentials
• To Be Competitive, you have to understand
the Graduate Program & Admissions Process
• Now, how can your summer (or other) research experience help…
• What are Admissions Committees looking for in the Application Materials…
In lieu of what we’ve discussed so far…
• How will your research experience help you reach your goals for graduate school?
• What are you going to do to make sure that happens?
To Establish a Relationship and Communicate with Your Research Mentor ① Meet regularly – it keeps you motivated to make progress and keeps your
mentor aware of your work. ② Prepare for your meetings – bring a list of topics, plan for what you hope to get
out of the meeting, send a summary of progress since the last meeting ③ Follow-up – after each meeting with a brief summary that includes time and plan
for next meeting, new summary of what you think you are doing, to do list for yourself, to do list for your advisor, list of related work to read, list of major topics discussed, list of what you agreed upon
④ Be professional – don’t let your personal life impact your professional life ⑤ Communication is key – set up a system that fits their style ⑥ Be honest – about your skills and knowledge ⑦ Establish multiple mentors ⑧ Don’t sit back and wait for your mentor to guide you ⑨ Be open to feedback ⑩ Communicate clearly and address any issues sooner than later
Remember The Package and Be The Package
• Hard Working • Independent • Critical Thinker • Team Player • Passionate about Science • Creative
Demonstrate the Package!
• Get the research experience you need • Act like a grad student or learn how • Talk to your PI/program director about
your plans and get their support and buy-in
• Get feedback about your strengths and weaknesses and improve
• Find out what the programs will be looking for, and be that!
• Earn the letter that you need!
Let’s Review • Apply Early • Know the process • Remember that you’re applying for a job…
» The positions are in a small business » Work to get an interview » The job supports the life and career of several people
including the research PI (Faculty)
• Know what the program is looking for and be that!
… and if you don’t have the needed experience, get it!
June to May mentored research experience Labs skills boot camp in early summer GRE prep course tailored to your needs Take graduate level course in the fall Get help with grad school applications and
interviews http://med.unc.edu/prep
If you don’t gain admission this year, then present a stronger package next year!
I’m happy to answer any questions you have. Summer Research programs: Jessica Harrell, Ph.D. [email protected] Postbacc program: PhD programs: Josh Hall, Ph.D. Ashalla Freeman, Ph.D. [email protected] [email protected]
Good Luck and Thank you